Flying Spaghetti Monster lands outside Tennessee courthouse
Posted by Lippard at 4/02/2008 07:57:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: civil liberties, law, religion
Posted by Lippard at 4/02/2008 07:03:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: law, wiretapping
Posted by Lippard at 4/02/2008 06:58:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: atheism, civil liberties, Islam, movies, religion
Posted by Einzige at 4/01/2008 07:43:00 PM 0 comments
Labels: Arizona, housing bubble
Posted by Lippard at 4/01/2008 06:51:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: parody
Until three years ago, Arizona's success rate in cases like this was no better than most of the country. This past month, however, physicians in the state reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association that a new regimen by paramedics has tripled the success rate, to more than 5 percent. Among patients whose collapse from cardiac arrest was observed, long-term survival went from 4.7 percent to 17.6 percent.
In a bold departure from standard practice, paramedics in most Arizona cities do not follow the guidance of the American Heart Association. Instead, they follow a protocol that was developed at the University of Arizona's Sarver Heart Center, largely by Dr. Gordon Ewy.
Even after cardiac arrest, Ewy said, there's enough oxygen in the body to feed the brain and keep a person alive for several minutes. But that air helps only if someone compresses the heart to circulate blood. In traditional CPR, rescuers alternate 30 chest compressions with two long "rescue breaths." Paramedics are trained to start by checking the airway, and insert a breathing tube at the start of resuscitation. These extra steps, said Ewy, waste precious time.
In Arizona, paramedics skip the breathing step. They simply alternate two minutes of pumping on the chest -- 200 compressions -- with a single shock from a defibrillator.
This is similar to a story Newsweek reported last summer, which indicated that giving oxygen to cardiac arrest patients is the wrong thing to do. It's nice to see Arizona on the cutting edge, here.
Posted by Lippard at 3/31/2008 08:46:00 PM 1 comments
said she faced a campaign to get her fired because she expressed the view that intelligent design was not only poor theology, but “so stupid, I don’t want to give them my time.”Murphy, who believes in evolution, said she had to fight to keep her job after one of the founding members of the intelligent design movement, legal theorist Phillip Johnson, called a trustee at the seminary and tried to get her fired.
It seems there is quite a different movie still to be made here, about religious persecution of scientists who dare to argue for evolution.
UPDATE (April 20, 2008): Blake Stacey has put together a more extensive list.Posted by Lippard at 3/31/2008 01:44:00 PM 2 comments
Labels: creationism, Expelled, Institute for Creation Research, intelligent design, religion, science
The claims of "Expelled" about individuals who have allegedly been persecuted are bogus--Gonzales was denied tenure because he wasn't publishing research, Sternberg wasn't persecuted at all, and Crocker simply didn't have her contract renewed (and deservedly so--she was both a bad teacher and was making horrible creationist arguments, as has been documented with her PowerPoint slides online).He also deleted a link that Norman Doering included in a comment, and banned Norman from his blog. Norman's comment was this:
On the other hand, Chris Comer really was removed from her position as Director of Science at the Texas Education Agency for simply sending out an email announcing that Barbara Forrest was giving a talk about "Creationism's Trojan Horse." The ID advocates have no case of persecution that approaches that in severity.
Tom Gilson wrote:
The connection between Darwinism and the Holocaust is not a lie when it is understood the way thoughtful people have presented it.
Feel free to present that “thoughtful way” here:
http://normdoering.blogspot.com/2007/04/if-hitler-was-darwinist.html
But Tom deleted the link because clicking on the link first gives a content warning from Blogger. Norman's post is well worth reading, as I pointed out in a comment on Tom's blog that made it under the wire before he closed comments:
Tom: It’s too bad you deleted Norman Doering’s link to his blog post. It’s actually a quite interesting post about how the Nazis actually banned writings promoting Darwinism, and how it was creationist Edward Blyth’s ideas that led to eugenics. Norman also points out multiple passages from Hitler’s _Mein Kampf_ which look more like something written by a creationist than an evolutionist.By the way, Gilson claims that P.Z. Myers "crashed" the conference call. In fact, he was invited to attend, as was the entire Panda's Thumb blogging crew--just not to be a presenter on the call.
Posted by Lippard at 3/28/2008 04:21:00 PM 9 comments
Labels: Bill Muehlenberg, censorship, creationism, Expelled, history, intelligent design, Richard Sternberg affair
Posted by Lippard at 3/28/2008 10:12:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: religion, Scientology
Posted by Lippard at 3/28/2008 09:55:00 AM 2 comments
Labels: copyright, law, religion, Scientology